KIMBERLEY REGION – 4 – 10 July 2022 – So, last week we found a number of large caves that needed surveying; only the surveyors are in camp now, everyone else has gone back to Kununurra. The weather is still being kind to us and we’re all fired up to see what secrets will be revealed in the caves we’ve found. Morning temperatures are still around 8ºC but I’m a bit warmer now as the Lovely K has given me a hoodie to wear!
Monday 4 July – two vehicles drove over to the Banana Boab parking spot, one group were going to survey Banana Boab and the MAD surveyors (Marilyn, Alison & David) were crossing over the Banana Boab outcrop and walking 2k walk to KNI162 a cave that looked really promising last week.
We exited the cave and made our way back to the Banana Boab outcrop in under 1/2 an hour, then sat in the shade waiting for the others. They hadn’t quite finished the survey so we’d be going back later on in the week.
John said he had a surprise for me – I was worried that it was a snake, but it turned out to be two Cane Toads – John had found them in Banana Boab cave. I’d shown a lot of interest in the Toads and John is a member of Kimberley “Toad Busters” he caught the toads with the intention of euthanising them.
For my overseas friends, a bit of background on the Cane Toads … Someone back in 1935 had the bright idea of introducing Cane Toads to Australia to control pest beetles in the Queensland sugar cane crops. A government entomologist went to Hawaii where the toads had been introduced from Puerto Rico. He brought a breeding pair home and by August, at the Bureau, the toads had successfully reproduced 2400 little toads in captivity and they were released. Amazingly no studies on potential impact on the environment were carried out and the Bureau of Sugar Experiment Stations hadn’t even determined whether the toad would actually eat the cane beetles.
A prominent entomologist was (rightly) concerned that the toads would become a significant pest, and he fought to get further releases of the toad banned, but in 1936 PM Lyons succumbed to pressure from the Qld Government (and the media) to rescind the ban and the rest is history. they’ve travelled as far as the Kimberley Region now and have even been found in Sydney. You’ll find the full story here.
For more information go to Kimberley Toad Busters but basically their home page says it all “The work of the Community group Kimberley Toad Busters has clearly shown that by community involvement in controlling cane toad population numbers in a given area you minimise the chance of native predators attacking and consuming a toad, which in turn reduces the number of native animals dying as a the direct impact of the cane toad. Keeping toad numbers (adult and all breeding cycles) under control also helps the smaller insect eating native predators such as frogs, smaller skinks and lizards by reducing food competition. With cane toads capable of eating around 200 insects a night, uncontrolled numbers of cane toads increases food competition very quickly so the loss of smaller native species (full extent yet unknown) is probably quite significant (KTB research is supporting this conclusion). Kimberley Toad Busters field based research activities are primarily focussed on understanding the impacts of cane toads on wildlife and on developing ways to manage these impacts.”
I was on high alert in the caves from this moment on, but really didn’t want to find one, and I didn’t have a plastic bag. John must have had x-ray vision finding these two!
Tuesday/Wednesday 5 & 6 July – The full contingent, in two cars, went over to what we’d call the Bore Parking spot and headed out to survey two caves that are side by side in a large outcrop of limestone, David, Bob P and I would be surveying KNI159, David thought it would take 1.5 days – it took 2 and we still weren’t finished with it!
On Wednesday I woke up to 8ºC again, I’d brought my summer sleeping bag and it just wasn’t cutting it, even with the Lovely K’s hoodie! We’re off again at 7.30 and the 2k walk to the cave, “we’ll be finished by lunch time!” says David – nope, not even close. Back to KNI159 and we found more convoluted passages than we could count, lots of decorations and a few nasty crawls. The good news is that we had voice contact with the surveyors in the cave just along from us which means there’s a connection, it’s always exciting when that happens. We found a climb down (too difficult for me or David), Bob went down and met up with the others who said they’d just been through a nasty crawl, thank goodness I didn’t have to do that.
Back at camp, during happy hour, Ann offered me their spare blanket (they’d pulled the doonah out of storage), I jumped at it and had the first uninterrupted sleep that night, toasty warm.
Thursday 7 July – some of John’s friends from Kununurra came out to do some caving with us. The plan was to go further north by car from where we were camped to check out an old trip report that Bob K had found.
Apparently, the year before the cavers had flown over this area and picked out potential cave sites and written that they’d found one and tagged it. So, we set off to find it. We were looking for a valley that had a lot of cycads.
We found the spot where they wrote that they’d camped (after a bit of wandering around) and started walking. The first valley that we came to we discarded (we felt it was too soon, we’d only been walking a short time), so we continued on; and kept walking; and kept walking. Eventually everyone but Bob and David W were lazing around in the shade, we picked the trip report to death, it said that they’d finished looking at the cave by noon, so they wouldn’t have walked as far as us.
Then we heard that David W was finding some interesting things up at the base of the cliff-line, so, David, Bob P, Alison and I headed up to join David W. He’d hit the jackpot and KNI163 aka as Marvelous cave was found. Some very nice formations photographed by David W after 2 small crawls through dust.
When David W had had enough of the cave, he came out and sat with me (I wasn’t ready to go in yet). We got to talking and he mentioned that when he was traversing at the cliff-base, he found a number of aboriginal art sites and that some of the places he saw were definitely “secret men’s business”. He told me about the pinnacles that were along the cliff (a couple of very large stone pinnacles separate from the cliff face) ad explained their significance. I asked him later that day if he could repeat what he’d told me about the pinnacles so that I could write about it and he said he couldn’t because he wasn’t a traditional owner and so it wasn’t his story to tell.
Friday – 8 July – Brian had to finish off part of Banana Boab that they’d not had time for earlier in the week, and David W-C said that he thought they’d missed a section that he’d seen on the first trip in “We went into a big flat area and then found this hole” which Bob P cannot remember”. So we went back in to finish off the survey and try to find David’s “big Hole”.
Lots of surveying to do, two massive big chambers and lots of side passages, very nice formations.
Saturday – 9 July, our last day of caving. We walked from camp for quite a while, taking photos of Boab trees (and their unusual markings – still think the markings are scars of some kind), and then we went to KNI79 to finish off some surveying to complete that particular project. Bob K, Alison and I finished off a passage close to the entrance and then moved to another grike, and then over to a cave that Alison found – she was excited, she thought she’d found another cave. Unfortunately it wasn’t a new find, just part of a cave that had already been surveyed, KNI80 Cathedral Cave.
And, so ended my 2 weeks caving and cave surveying in the Kimberley Region.
I hope that these expeditions continue for years to come, and that we can encourage younger cavers to learn to survey so that they too can go on these trips and experience wild caving to this extent. So, my younger caving friends, next time there’s a course to learn to survey sign up, or, come on some of the trips that MSS puts on the calendar – it’s really easy to start at the base level.
These 2 weeks were an amazing experience, a big thanks to all the group for your support and an even bigger thanks to Bob K and ISS for running the trip. I was extremely fortunate, I had marvelous weather – it’s not always like that, and I got a lot of support getting to and from the area with David W-C, words cannot express how thankful I am, thank you David!
Thumbnail: what a LiDAR image looks like.